Round 3: Tossup 17

It’s not Legendre (“luh-JOND”), but this mathematician names a method of computing the integrals of polynomials, his namesake quadrature. (-5[1])It’s not Ostrogradsky, but this man sometimes gives his name to the Divergence Theorem, (10[1])as well as to the set obtained by adjoining i to the integers. (10[1])This man published the Theorema (-5[1])Egregium, which concerns his namesake curvature for surfaces. This man names a function whose simplest form is the exponential of minus x squared. (10[2])Systems of (10[1])linear equations can be solved by this man’s (10[1])namesake elimination, (10[2])and he also names (10[1])a distribution whose graph is a bell curve. (10[1])For 10 points, name this mathematician who gives his name (10[1])to another name for the normal distribution. ■END■ (10[1])

ANSWER: Carl Friedrich Gauss [accept Gaussian quadrature; accept Gauss’s theorem; accept Gaussian integers; accept Gaussian curvature; accept Gaussian; accept Gaussian elimination]
<Editors, Other Science> | Packet D
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